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View Full Version : Happy Birthday Sir Paul!



irvin66
06-18-2012, 10:11 PM
Sir Paul McCartney is seventy years old today! Congratulations and Celebrations...:party::party::party:

flabbybody
06-19-2012, 12:36 AM
forever young.
happy birthday Sir Paul

Ecstatic
06-19-2012, 12:38 AM
Will you still feed me, will you still need me....

So you say it's your birthday, well it's my birthday too, yeah

Dino Velvet
06-19-2012, 12:38 AM
I'm not the only one who thinks so.

http://totallylookslike.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/2708cf8b-7140-4d70-bca7-aa8cc1a7f69c.jpg

cdgirl-tr
06-19-2012, 03:38 AM
long live Paul

robertlouis
06-19-2012, 03:50 AM
Yesterday's Guardian editorial, no less.

Paul McCartney at 70: still at number one

His performance at the Queen's jubilee concert was a reminder of his unique and deserved status in the national culture

His music has been loved for half a century, but Paul McCartney has probably never been more admired than he is on Monday, his 70th birthday – and with good reason. His performance at the Queen's jubilee concert earlier this month was not his best, but it was an unerringly powerful reminder of his unique and deserved status in the national culture. So, likewise, will be his place at the climax of next month's Olympic games opening ceremony. Paul McCartney is the top of the bill for a reason.

That reason is his songs. Dozens, even hundreds, lots written with John Lennon, many written on his own, a few duds certainly but, all in all, the greatest songwriting career of the era. Where to start? Perhaps with PS, I Love You in 1962. Or maybe All My Loving, Can't Buy Me Love, I've Just Seen a Face, and loads more; you all know them, make your own list – it will be a long one. He defined and moved with the swing of the 60s, morphing from besuited moptop to kaftanned hippie, as he broke out of the confines of the rock'n'roll ditty to dream up the Technicolour glories of Sgt Pepper. Through the dope and facial hair, there was always regard for deeper traditions, and – from Penny Lane to Blackbird – the one constant was craftsmanship in fusing melody and verse. The greatest songwriter since Schubert, the Times music critic William Mann boldly asserted back then. That claim doesn't seem hubristic now. No one has a back catalogue to touch his. But back catalogue doesn't do justice to the sheer artistic generosity he has bequeathed. His songs are our songs too.

He has gone through periods of being uncool – but then McCartney is a working-class northerner in a London posh-boy dominated country and he has lived a long time. There was a time when the Stones had more attitude, then punk, then hip-hop. But whose songs will last longest? No contest. Lennon, edgier, more aggressive and dead, was more rebellious, more political. But it was the two of them together who led the revolution. And McCartney stayed in Britain, fought to save his local NHS hospital, sent his kids to state schools and would have been entitled to say "I earn a lot of money, so I pay a lot of taxes," even if, frustratingly, Google doesn't confirm the clear memory that he did.

Watching him at the jubilee concert was to be reminded that McCartney too is a national figure. If the Queen is an embodiment of one sort of Britain, McCartney is the embodiment of another, the egalitarian achieving social democratic optimism of the 1960s. From Love Me Do right through to Abbey Road's The End, his songs say I love you and I want you to love me – a better philosophy than much that came later, not just in music. What makes you proud to be British? Well, Paul McCartney does, for one. Number one, yet again.

LeatherTGirlLover
06-19-2012, 05:41 AM
Yesterday's Guardian editorial, no less.

Paul McCartney at 70: still at number one

His performance at the Queen's jubilee concert was a reminder of his unique and deserved status in the national culture

His music has been loved for half a century, but Paul McCartney has probably never been more admired than he is on Monday, his 70th birthday – and with good reason. His performance at the Queen's jubilee concert earlier this month was not his best, but it was an unerringly powerful reminder of his unique and deserved status in the national culture. So, likewise, will be his place at the climax of next month's Olympic games opening ceremony. Paul McCartney is the top of the bill for a reason.

That reason is his songs. Dozens, even hundreds, lots written with John Lennon, many written on his own, a few duds certainly but, all in all, the greatest songwriting career of the era. Where to start? Perhaps with PS, I Love You in 1962. Or maybe All My Loving, Can't Buy Me Love, I've Just Seen a Face, and loads more; you all know them, make your own list – it will be a long one. He defined and moved with the swing of the 60s, morphing from besuited moptop to kaftanned hippie, as he broke out of the confines of the rock'n'roll ditty to dream up the Technicolour glories of Sgt Pepper. Through the dope and facial hair, there was always regard for deeper traditions, and – from Penny Lane to Blackbird – the one constant was craftsmanship in fusing melody and verse. The greatest songwriter since Schubert, the Times music critic William Mann boldly asserted back then. That claim doesn't seem hubristic now. No one has a back catalogue to touch his. But back catalogue doesn't do justice to the sheer artistic generosity he has bequeathed. His songs are our songs too.

He has gone through periods of being uncool – but then McCartney is a working-class northerner in a London posh-boy dominated country and he has lived a long time. There was a time when the Stones had more attitude, then punk, then hip-hop. But whose songs will last longest? No contest. Lennon, edgier, more aggressive and dead, was more rebellious, more political. But it was the two of them together who led the revolution. And McCartney stayed in Britain, fought to save his local NHS hospital, sent his kids to state schools and would have been entitled to say "I earn a lot of money, so I pay a lot of taxes," even if, frustratingly, Google doesn't confirm the clear memory that he did.

Watching him at the jubilee concert was to be reminded that McCartney too is a national figure. If the Queen is an embodiment of one sort of Britain, McCartney is the embodiment of another, the egalitarian achieving social democratic optimism of the 1960s. From Love Me Do right through to Abbey Road's The End, his songs say I love you and I want you to love me – a better philosophy than much that came later, not just in music. What makes you proud to be British? Well, Paul McCartney does, for one. Number one, yet again.

Fair enough and i agree with most of that but post Beatles (and even if i'm honest latter day Beatles) his work is pretty poor (C Moon, Jet, Silly Love Songs, The Frog Chorus, Hi Hi Hi...the list of lyrically suspect, musically simplistic, trite songs goes on), i don't think his work post Beatles puts him in the running for the 20th century's greatest songwriter however stuff like Penny Lane, Eleanor Rigby, Things We Said Today, Yesterday are amongst some of the finest songs written that century, so whilst Mann might have been right when he said that in the 60's i think the intervening years have somewhat sullied that claim.

Anyway Happy Birthday Paul

SugaSweet
06-19-2012, 06:15 AM
Happy birthday to the old buzzard.Does not look his age.

maaarc
06-19-2012, 07:24 AM
so sorry - Paul was killed in a car crash on November 9, 1966 and was replaced by look alike Fraul. RIP Paul :wiggle:

Prospero
06-19-2012, 09:35 AM
He's never had any facility with lyrics, he lets the songs meander on too long but the melodies are still terrific. Happy birthday, Sir P

buttslinger
06-19-2012, 06:48 PM
Without a doubt, the Beatles were the most influential musical group of the twentieth century.


Beatles- "I'll Follow the Sun" in Miami - YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGj8jwN_tkk)

LibertyHarkness
06-19-2012, 08:07 PM
bloke is one of the most pompus pricks in the world imo ..cant stand him ..